Homeschool Laws by State.
HomeHomeschool laws by state › Homeschool Laws in Texas

Homeschool Laws in Texas

Notification
No notice required
Assessment
No assessment required
Subjects
State list
Parent qualifications
none

In Texas, parents who wish to educate their children at home are not required to file any notice or obtain approval from the state, a local school district, or any government agency before beginning homeschool instruction. No registration forms, annual filings, or prior authorization are mandated under state education law. A family may simply withdraw a child from public school, if applicable, and begin home-based instruction without notifying any official body.

Texas does not require homeschooled students to undergo standardized testing or any formal academic assessment, nor does state education law impose qualifications on the parent or guardian who provides instruction. The law does, however, require that the homeschool program be conducted in a bona fide manner and that instruction cover five specific subjects: good citizenship, mathematics, reading, spelling, and grammar. No particular curriculum, textbook, or instructional method is prescribed beyond the requirement that those subjects be taught.

Homeschool statutes are subject to amendment by state legislatures, and changes most commonly take effect on July 1 of a given year. The information above reflects verified facts as of June 2026, but the law may have changed since that date. Families are encouraged to confirm current requirements directly with the Texas Education Agency or the appropriate state authority. This summary is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.

Requirement details

Required subjectsGood citizenship, math, reading, spelling, and grammar
Parent qualificationsnone
Get your state's legal checklist →

Compare homeschool laws in all 50 states →

Not legal advice. This page summarizes Texas law in plain English, verified as of June 2026 against the cited statutes. Legislatures amend homeschool law (most changes take effect July 1) — confirm current requirements with the state department of education or a licensed attorney before acting. How we verify this.

Your state's homeschool legal checklist

The notification, assessment, and subject rules for your state on one page, with statute citations. Free.

We'll email you useful info and the occasional offer. Unsubscribe anytime.
We use cookies to measure site traffic. See our Privacy Policy.